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Capital Expenditure Recovery
• Land account
• Depreciation – MACRS
• Section 179 deduction
• Timber (cost) depletion
• Reforestation amortization
• Investment tax credit (ITC) -- Repealed
• Fertilizer
Land Account
• Land account – assets include the land and non-
depreciable improvements
• Basis in recovered only when land is sold or
otherwise disposed of
• Cost of protecting title and combating adverse
possession is capitalized into the land account
– See Anderson Tully
– And Wacker cases
Depreciation
• General rule – annual deductions may be taken for
– “Property” used in a business or
– Held for production of income (i.e., an investment)
• Property must have a limited and determinable useful life
• It must either wear out, decay, get used up, become obsolete or lose value from natural causes [IRC §167(a)]
Timber Related Real Property
• IRC § 611 authorizes depreciation deductions
for timber related improvements
• Generally, depreciation methods applicable to all
taxpayers apply to timber-related real property
improvements – IRC § 168
• E.g., temporary roads, bridges, fences and
culverts may be depreciated over a MACRS 15-
year recovery period
Section 179 Deduction
• 2002 -- $25,000 of qualifying property may be deducted if associated with an “active business”
• Estates and trusts are not eligible.
• 2008 -- Economic Stimulus Act -- deduction increased to $250,000
• 2010-11 – Limit increased to $500,000 by the Small Business Jobs Act of 2010
• 2012 Relief Act -- § 179 $ limitations for 2012 and 2013 is $500,000 and investment limit is $2 million. It reverts to $25,000 after 2013.
Timber Depletion
• Generally, taxpayers can recover their investment in property tax-free when sold
• The gross sale proceeds are reduced by the basis in the property sold
• Same principle applies to timber – if all timber is sold, entire basis is recovered
• If only part of timber is sold, basis is “equitably apportioned” to part sold (Part II of Form T)
Depletion Rules
• Most timber dispositions involve non-fungible
trees – e.g., mature trees are cut and less mature
growth is retained
• IRC has special “depletion” rules that allocate
the trees cut and those that remain
• Depletion is used in two ways
– “Allowable as basis of sale” and
– Depletion deemed to be the “basis allocable” to the
timber cut – IRC § 631
Recovery of Timber Basis
• Taxpayer needs to know:
– Adjusted basis in timber account – original basis
plus purchases, transfers and capitalized cost; and
less sales, gifts and involuntary conversions
– Total volume in timber account – original volume
plus growth, purchases, and transfers; less sales gifts
and involuntary conversions
• See Part II of Form T
Depletion Calculation
• The depletion unit equals
– Adjusted basis divided by the total volume
– It is the $ investment per unit of measure
• Deductible basis for timber sold or disposed of
– The depletion unit times the number of units cut,
sold, or otherwise disposed of
• Results are identical whether a lump sum sale or
a disposal under IRC § 631(b) are used
Amortization Election
• Complete Depreciation and Amortization Form 4562, part VI and attach to return
• Or, attach similar information to inputs required on Form T, Part IV on a plain sheet of paper
• Election must be made on a timely filed, but cannot be made on an amended return
• Investors take deduction on front page of Form 1040, and businesses use Schedule C or F
New Expensing and Amortization
Procedures After 10/22/04
• Qualified reforestation expenditures up to $10,000 per
year may be expensed for each “eligible timber
property,” defined as one having a unique “stand
identifier” -- IRS fumbled this early! Note that all
managed forests with a Tree Farm Name, Location,
Management Units and stand level designations have
“unique stand identifiers”
• Amounts exceeding $10,000 may be amortized
• Expense deductions are subject to the passive activity
loss rules – business must be active
Investment Tax Credit was repealed
on October 22, 2004
• Prior tax credit was 10% and coordinated with the amortization deduction.
Revenue Ruling 2004-62 Revises
Treatment Of Fertilizer
• IRS’s withdrawal of GCM 39371 signaled a lack
of agreement on fertilizer, and with no published
authority, policy was left to district supervisors
• Generally, it was capitalized when reforesting,
but, expensing in established stands was based
on the useful life of fertilizer
• Following Rev. Ruling 2004-62, taxpayers may
expense fertilization in established stands